Saying Goodbye to my iMac

By Graham K. Rogers

I had been thinking of setting up a local area network (LAN) with the
iMac and the eMac. I gave it some serious thought but came up with the
question "What is the point?" Apart from backups, which I can do with
other media, there seem to be few reasons to have a LAN, apart from
impressing occasional visitors.

Once I had decided that a network was not part of my master plan, it
seemed obvious that the iMac would go; but selling a 2-year old
computer is a waste of time: transportation, negotiation, anticipation;
and then resignation to the few thousand baht that might appear weeks
or months down the line. I decided to give it away to a friend who had
been particularly helpful.

I started by creating a new standard user account, then making this an
Administrator account. I shut down, linked the two machines with a
Firewire cable and restarted the iMac in Target mode. The friend and I
then went through every part of my Home directory on the iMac to ensure
that I had transferred all needed data.

When I was happy, we restarted the iMac in the new Administrator's
account and, after a deep breath, deleted my account on that machine.
In typical fashion, we were asked if we wanted the account removed and
then if we really wanted to delete the account.

Creating the second admin account left all my Internet settings (dialup
and office network) intact, so I cleared these too. Once home, my
friend entered his data from Loxinfo and connected first time.

Once data was deleted, I had a careful look and removed some of the
software. I had installed many programs as experiments. These
applications were mainly odd little utilities that an unaware user
might be tempted to try: the result would be late-night phone calls.
Others were those (like LapCop) that could -- through legitimate
internet connections -- cause alarms to go off. My friend needed a
fairly stable environment to start with.

When I was satisfied with the cleanup, it was time to switch to
instruction mode. People who start to use OSX are not facing the same
environment as System 9 (some are still hanging on there) and it is
certainly not the same as Windows. Some, however, expect everything to
work the same and are horrified when, having deleted a couple of files
that did not appear to be doing anything, OSX misbehaves.

Apple too does not appear to be forthcoming enough here either. It is
left to people who write the books (or those who answer their phones)
to get these folks out of trouble. If you dig deep enough into the
Apple Knowledge Base (or the forums) answers can be found but people do
this after they are in trouble, not before.

After explaining the directory structures, I tackled what I consider to
be necessary maintenance routines. If you leave OSX on 24/7 these will
be run automatically. Most people either shut down or (like me) put
the computer to sleep: in these cases, the routines do not run.

I had left all the installers that I had downloaded on the iMac so put
on MacJanitor, a fairly simple utility that is run with a couple of
mouse clicks (on my own machine I have Macaroni, which does the tasks
automatically). This also had the advantage of demonstrating the way
disk images work.

I also demonstrated in Terminal how to run the same maintenance
routines. For example, the daily run requires you to type in sudo sh
/etc/daily (there are weekly and monthly too): each of these runs
routines and clears logs. They can only be run from the Admin account
and the administrator's password is required.

(Note: I wish users would do this, and run the following: these would save an awful lot of tears.)

I also consider it important regularly to run the process of repairing
permissions. Using the Disk Utility this is fairly simple and just
requires the click of a button. I run this at least once a week. I
also run the process before and after installing new software. Some
people may regard this as overkill. While running this process I
realised just how much faster the eMac was. I also that importing
music into iTunes from a CD was about 4 or 5 times faster.More processing power makes for a faster computer, of course.

I was keeping my printer, so we looked at the Printer Setup
Utility (in System Preferences or in the Utilities folder) and I
deleted my HP 920c. In "Add" (to confirm that his Canon was there) I
selected IP printers and ran through the list of drivers then
reselected USB printers. All that was necessary was to turn on the
printer, put in the USB cable and start Printer Setup: the printer was
installed automatically.

Armed with these basics, and with some experience of different
operating systems, I reckoned that he was about ready to start the
longer period of self-learning that a new computer initiates. I handed
over the iMac and the original installation disks.

As he left, I began to wonder about the latest PowerBooks and iBooks: a
portable plus a desktop is a much better idea than a LAN.